ADVENTURES IN REFERRAL a daily assortment of random
search engine queries leading people to the Ludic Log in the past 24
hours
"Juggernaut's
family"
"Nevada how old do you have to be to get a tattoo laws"
"hookers who fuck"
"David Bezmogis"
"shitting leads to weight loss"
"peanut paprika chips"
"Chinese communist hat"
"my liver hurts"
"Whitman watching over the tormented"
"CHEF EMERIL RETARDED"
02.09.2006
Dear Mr. Baldwin,
My apologies for contacting you so presumptuously, but I think you'll
be so excited about the program I'm proposing that you'll forgive my
having bypassed the normal channels. For years, HBO has been
enjoying success with historical drama -- millions of viewers have
enjoyed your network's gripping adult visions of the past in such
programs as "Deadwood", "Rome" and "Carnivale". Well, not so much
"Carnivale", but you tried, and I, for one, appreciate the
effort. It's the kind of effort I put into my own hobbies of
public access television production and amateur historical research,
the very hobbies which I've combined to bring you "Nooit Meer Oorlog,
Godsvrede, Zelfbestuur".
Set against the thrilling backdrop of the turn of the 20th century,
this raw, no-holds-barred historical drama brings viewers the story of
the Flemish Movement in all its sanguine glory. Beginning in 1898
when the Dutch language was first legally recognized in Belgium and
concluding thirty years later with the election of a previously
condemned Flemish leader to parliament, my story follows a group of
sexy, streetwise young Flanders Dutch through the boisterous golden
years of Flemish independence. Foul-mouthed sailor Anders,
mild-mannered but passionate scholar Larsen and enigmatic dark-haired
beauty Anna are the fateful triangle who guide us through hours of
gripping drama, coming to terms not only with Germanic cultural
influences, Walloon resistance and the fiercely combative atmosphere at
Ghent University, but also their own struggle for "peace, tolerance and
autonomy". A good solid Flemish meal peppered with HBO's patented
spice blends of sex, violence, and sophistication, "Nooit Meer Oorlog,
Godsvrede, Zelfbestuur" is Belgium the way you never imagined...and
you'll never forget.
I include plot synopses of the first 100 episodes, my agent's contact
information and office hours, and a short demo I put together at the
Channel 92 studios. I'm looking forward to working with you.
Eagerly,
Byron Hotchkiss
***
Dear Mr. Baldwin,
Almost six weeks have passed since you received my proposal for a new
HBO drama series highlighting the daring struggles of a trio of
attractive, thin crusaders for Flemish cultural independence.
While I realize that as the programming director for a major pay cable
network, you are probably very busy, that is a far longer response time
than I have encountered in previous submissions to the Kalispell Daily
InterLake, Country's Best Log Homes, or the Campbell's Chicken
SoupOff. I must therefore regretfully assume that you have
decided to pass on "Nooit Meer Oorlog, Godsvrede, Zelfbestuur".
While it saddens me to think that my creation will have to wait for me
to complete a big-screen treatment, I am not a bitter man. I
understand that there may have been many reasons you chose not to buy
the series: fear of alienating Walloon-Americans, the risk of
overshadowing "The Sopranos", the difficulty of finding the perfect
casting for Flemish literary giant Hendrik Conscience.
But frankly, David -- I may call you David, may I not? -- I think that
I am far too prolific and talented a writer, and you far too
forward-thinking and wealthy and executive, for us not to work
together. That's why I'm offering you the right of first refusal
on a mini-series based on my first stage presentation, "SA/GA".
The turbulent era of the late 1960s is the setting for this epic tale
of family, freedom, and creative expression as we watch the trials and
tribulations of Jack and Curt, two brothers bound by blood but torn by
their respective love of Golden and Silver Age superhero comics.
And trapped between them is Clara, the woman who loves both men, and
only kind of likes comics. Combining the sure-fire dramatic
fireworks HBO dramas are famous for and my own encyclopedic knowledge
of superhero comics of the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, it's just the sort
of thing that wins Emmys and nets million-dollar contracts.
I include scripts for the first 25 episodes, photographs of local women
I think would be good in the role of Clara, and color photocopies of
several hundred of the comic book panels I believe should be featured
in the opening credits. Here's to a long and successful working
relationship.
Sincerely,
Byron Hotchkiss
***
Dear David,
In all the months we've been working together, I thought we had
developed a rapport. I thought I knew you -- a courageous,
risk-taking producers with access to Time-Warner money -- as well as
you knew me, a brilliant maverick writer-producer-creative consultant
with an eye for historical detail and a yearning to be in on casting
decisions for female parts. But it looks like I didn't know you
at all. The man I thought I knew turns out to be a timeserving
hack too busy to read his mail, but never too busy to call security; a
slick-talking pro who uses 'copyright infringement' as a smokescreen to
hide his own incompetence; and worst of all, a coward. That's
right, David: a coward. A man who plays it safe with
predictable, uninspiring historical dramas set during yawner eras like
ancient Rome, the Old West and the Great Depression.
You know what, David? You're not worth it. You're not worth
my threats, recrimination, and resentment. You're not even worth
the 325-page screenplay about an innovative television writer and the
mule-headed producer who tries to ruin him that I wrote. My
groundbreaking TV drama about the savage conflicts that led to the 1792
Mint and Coinage Act; my torrid film treatment of the Treaty of
Ryswick; my dynamic, intense maxi-series about Lithuanian land reform
after the First World War -- those all would have been perfect for
HBO. They have lots of cursing and naked chicks and every single
one of them has a part for that midget from 'Twin Peaks'. But you
blew it, Davey Boy. You blew it.
I'm 100% certain that Cinemax won't be so myopic. And who'll be
filing the restraining orders then, Baldwin?
"Because
you are a great lord, you believe yourself to be a great genius!
You took the trouble to be born, but no more." (Pierre-Augustom de Beaumarchais)